PHOTOS: Defense of Christians Summit opens in Washington

idc6(WASHINGTON, DC) — A three day conference dedicated to aiding the Christians in the Middle East opened yesterday in Washington, DC. The “In Defense of Christians” Summit (IDC) will bring together lawmakers, Eastern and Western churches, community leaders and various Christian groups to address the issues that concern Middle Eastern Christians.

Lebanese Patriarch Beshara Rai is participating in the conference.

Patriarchs praying at the In Defense of Christians conference in Washington, DC.
Patriarchs praying at the In Defense of Christians conference in Washington, DC.
Andrew Doran, the executive director of In Defense of Christians.
Andrew Doran, the executive director of In Defense of Christians.

“Christian institutions provide social service, health care and education for millions throughout the region. Christians are not only the lawyers, doctors and businessmen in their communities, they are also the servants…their very presence is the source of pluralism that has a moderating influence throughout the region,” said Doran.

Toufic Baaklini, the president of In Defense of Christians.
Toufic Baaklini, the president of In Defense of Christians.

“Our brothers and sisters are suffering terribly,” Baaklini said. “Our duty, the moral duty of the hundreds of you that are here today from all over the world, is to stand together under the banner of our common cause, the cause of faith, existence and tranquility.”

John Ashcroft, former U.S. Attorney General
John Ashcroft, former U.S. Attorney General

“We are here because there are those who are the victims of individuals around the world, who are victimized because people seek to impose on them their idea of some construct of God, some construct of morality, some construct of human existence,” Ashcroft said.

Cardinal Leonardo Sandri
Cardinal Leonardo Sandri

“It is very significant that the meeting is taking place between people of different Christian denominations and people of religion who believe as Christ the value of the freedom of the human person,” the Cardinal said.

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Lebanese Patriarch speaks at DC Christian conference

(WASHINGTON, DC) — Eastern patriarchs said the international community must work to protect Christians by taking firm measures against extremism during a Christian solidarity summit in Washington, DC on Wednesday.

Speaking at the opening ceremony Tuesday, Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai called on the United States and the United Nations Security Council to “take a clear stance and more aggressive steps to protect the Christians who are being slaughtered and displaced at the hands of ISIS and terrorist organizations.”

“We came to Washington, the hub of international decision, to say that it is not right to let down humankind as if we were thrown back into the Stone Age,” Rai said in reference to the flight of Christians in the face of advancing ISIS militants in Mosul and north Iraq.

“The Orient is home for Christians who have been there for more than 2,000 years. Today Christians are threatened with extermination, and no power in the Arab or Western world has moved a finger,” Rai lamented. “How is it possible that no one could stop the advancing monster?”

The Maronite prelate stressed that world powers should assume their responsibility in curbing extremist organizations and ensuring the safe return of displaced Christians to their homes in Iraq and Syria.

“The Muslim, Arab and international communities have no right to idly watch violations of human rights being committed. Either we have justice in this world, or we are living under the law of the jungle,” Rai said.

“We came here to say that we are humiliated not only as Christians, but as human beings. We say all the displaced should return to their homes and live in security and dignity.”

The conference, which opened in U.S. capital Tuesday, was held upon the initiative of the Washington-based Association for the Defense of Christians in the Orient.

The patriarchs of Oriental churches sounded the alarm last month over the persecution of Christians at the hands of ISIS, who have captured large swaths of land in north Iraq and Syria and forced non-Muslims to convert or face persecution and death.

The patriarchs called on the international community to intervene militarily in Iraq and Syria to curb the militants and protect Christians who had fled their homes in the face of rampant ISIS violence.

Gebran Bassil to meet with John Kerry in Saudi Arabia

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil is scheduled to travel to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia to attend talks on joint action against the Islamic State (IS) group, a cabinet minister said.

The minister, who remained unidentified, told al-Liwaa newspaper in remarks published Wednesday that Bassil will attend a meeting between U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and nine Arab states in addition to Turkey.

Kerry is seeking to build a broad coalition against jihadists in Iraq and Syria that has already won support from Arab nations.

The talks coincide with a much-touted address from President Barack Obama at the White House, where he will outline a strategy to confront IS and address criticism that he has been slow to respond to a wave of atrocities that has shocked the world.

Islamic extremists overran the Lebanese border town of Arsal last month, killing and capturing a number of soldiers and police officers.

The fighting between Lebanese troops and the militants was the most serious spillover yet of Syria’s conflict into the neighboring country.

Colombian impostor poses as Lebanese diplomat

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(BOGOTA, COLUMBIA) — A Colombian man is being investigated for posing as a Lebanese diplomat after giving lectures on the Middle East and advising the Colombian military under a false identity, local media reported.

Jeyson Puello, a resident of the northeast city of Valledupar, was using diplomatic papers with a UN seal to pass himself off as Jason Ali Hakim Abdullaziz Al Nayb, supposedly a high-ranking diplomat and former Lebanese foreign minister, news reports said.

Authorities say Puello posed as the ambassador for several months. He spoke to local universities on Middle Eastern affairs, sent news releases and sponsored a charity event for firefighters. He carried fake IDs from the United Nations and Colombia’s foreign ministry.

Puello denies committing any crime. He tells the local newspaper Vanguardia that as a Muslim with Lebanese roots, he’s qualified to talk on the Middle East and calls the impersonation a joke.

Despite his perfect Spanish and ordinary clothing, Puello managed to get into official meetings and establish a network of army contacts under the assumed identity.

But a curious colonel who noticed the “diplomat” always arrived at meetings on foot contacted the Lebanese embassy in Bogota.

“There’s no person by that name,” he was told in a letter printed in newsweekly Semana.

The letter called on Colombian authorities to investigate and try the “imposter.”

Police caught Puello by sending a fake invitation to “the honorable ambassador.”

He was briefly detained but has been released pending further investigation.

Puello had two diplomatic accreditations, one from the Colombian foreign ministry and another identifying him as the Lebanese ambassador, said daily newspaper El Tiempo.

The Colombian foreign ministry declined to comment.

DC summit to spotlight plight of Christians in the Middle East

omni-hotel-washington-dc(WASHINGTON, DC) — The deteriorating situation facing millions of Christians and other religious minorities in the Middle East will be the focus of a bipartisan and ecumenical conference in the nation’s capital this week.

The global summit will take place from September 9 to September 11 in Washington, D.C.

The three-day event sponsored by In Defense of Christians (IDC) will feature speakers from all over the globe. The IDC Summit for Middle East Christians, whose theme is “Protecting and Preserving Christianity, Where It All Began”, will be the first occasion in history where six Christian Patriarchs from the Middle East will gather together in the United States.

“For too long, Westerners have stood by, silent or unaware, while Christians and other groups in the Middle East have endured discrimination, persecution, and religious cleansing,” said Toufic Baaklini, the president of IDC.

“Today, as the Islamic State continues its genocidal campaign against Christians in Iraq and Syria, the globe is finally awakening to their plight. IDC exists to give voice to these voiceless people. In this hour of their greatest peril, they are in desperate need of support. We must act now.”

Summit attendees will have the opportunity to meet with Members of Congress and their staff, policy makers, diplomats, human rights activists, and religious leaders.

“This summit will empower the Middle Eastern Christian Diaspora and energize the American people to stand in solidarity the ancient Christian communities of the Middle East. Their survival is vital to stability in the region, and their ability to flourish in their countries of origin has national security implications for the United States,” Baaklini said.

Speakers include: Maronite Patriarch Cardinal Rai; Syriac Patriarch Ignatius Aphrem II; Archbishop of Washington Donald Cardinal Wuerl; Leonardo Cardinal Sandri of the Vatican’s Prefect of the Congregation for Oriental Churches; Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX); Congresswoman Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Congressman Ted Deutch (D-FL); Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL); Dr. James Zogby; and Nina Shea, Director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom.

Lebanon hostages prompt backlash against Syrian refugees

Part-NIC-Nic6359913-1-1-0(BAALBECK, LEBANON) — The kidnaping and murder of Lebanese security forces by jihadists from Syria has sparked new tensions in Lebanon, including a backlash against Syrian refugees and a string of sectarian kidnappings.

Relatives of the missing soldiers and policemen, who were kidnapped during fierce clashes in theLebanese border town of Arsal last month, have blocked roads in protest and even carried out counter-kidnaps.

On Monday, a security source said two people from majority Sunni Arsal had been kidnapped by the family of soldier Ali al-Masri.

One of the negotiators involved in the talks aimed at solving the hostage crisis confirmed the report: “The family is asking the people of Arsal to pressure the [jihadist] kidnappers to release their son, and it insists it will not release its hostages until [the soldiers] are free.”

Elsewhere in the majority Shiite Beqaa valley, tit-for-tat kidnappings took place on Monday, according to security sources, who said the army is trying to resolve the spiraling crisis.

The incidents follow confirmation that a second Lebanese soldier being held by jihadists from the Islamic State (IS) has been beheaded.

The hostage crisis and beheadings have inflamed tensions in Lebanon, which is hosting more than 1.1 million Syrian refugees, and where tensions were already soaring over the four-year conflict in Syria.

The crisis has prompted a backlash against Syrian refugees in parts of Lebanon, with tents in informal camps being set alight and hundreds of Syrians sheltered in the Beqaa valley fleeing for fear of attack.

The Syrian conflict has exacerbated existing sectarian tensions in Lebanon, where most Sunni residents back the Syrian uprising and Shiites generally support Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad.

The August fighting in Arsal was the most serious border incident in Lebanon since the Syrian war began next door in March 2011.

With the ensuing hostage crisis unresolved to date despite ongoing Qatari mediation, reports of the soldier’s beheading first emerged on Saturday, prompting angry Lebanese to cut roads with burning tires in protest.

The official National News Agency meanwhile reported that refugees in several camps across the country – especially those in Shiite areas whose residents support Assad ally Hezbollah – had been told to evacuate their tents.

An AFP journalist in the eastern Beqaa valley saw Syrian refugees dismantle their tents and leave in their thousands for northern Lebanon, the west of the Beqaa and Beirut.

– Beatings –

Incidents of violence targeting Syrians have also been reported.

George Ghattas, a farmer from the village of Taybeh in the Beqaa valley, told AFP he saw a group of men attacking the Syrian guard of an unfinished construction site.

“The man then fled,” Ghattas said.

In southern Lebanon, Syrian refugees hosted in some 100 tents near the city of Tyre were given 48 hours to evacuate their camp.

“We don’t want to have terror cells developing in big camps,” Burj al-Shimali mayor Ali Deeb told AFP on Monday. “We have given the Syrians living in the camp 48 hours to leave.”

And in Beirut, a witness who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity said he saw a group of some five young men surround and beat a Syrian man in his early twenties, after they discovered where he was from.

“They started shouting: ‘Are you Syrian or not?’” the witness said, adding that “five or six of the guys started beating him, taking turns to hit him.”

Amid the rise in tensions, the authorities have appealed for calm, calling on the Lebanese to refrain from revenge attacks.

“The Syrian refugees are our family, they asked for our help, so we assisted them,” said Prime Minister Tammam Salam in a televised speech.

Expressing “feelings of sadness and grief” for the suffering of the families of the kidnapped soldiers, Salam said that “what has been happening on the streets in the past few days damages the memory of the martyrs… while plunging the country into deep danger.”

But in spite of the appeal, there was little sign the tensions could be immediately dispelled.

Speaking to AFP, Human Rights Watch researcher Lama Fakih confirmed the spike in violence: “We have seen a string of retaliatory measures against Syrian refugees in Lebanon taken by individuals and municipalities.”

“This is happening countrywide,” Fakih said.

Islamic State beheads 2nd captive Lebanese soldier

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The mother of a Lebanese soldier held captive by the militant Islamic State group said photographs posted online Saturday purporting to show his beheading appeared to be real.

Zeinab Noun said her 20-year-old son, Abbas Medlej, was “sacrificed” after supporters of the militant Sunni group posted images appearing to show a captured Lebanese soldier before and after he was beheaded.

Medlej’s maternal uncle, Abu Ali Noun, also said the photographs appeared to be of his nephew. A spokesman for Lebanon’s military said it was still investigating the incident.

Medlej would be the second captive Lebanese soldier killed by the Islamic State group, underscoring the grave challenges that face the ill-equipped Lebanese military as it fends off an unprecedented jihadi threat from Syria-based militants.

About two dozen more members of the country’s security forces remain held captive by the militants. They were seized in August when several Syrian rebel factions, including the Islamic State group and al-Qaida linked Nusra Front, overran the Lebanese border town of Arsal, killing and kidnapping soldiers and policemen in the most serious spillover yet of the neighboring civil war.

The Syrian civil war has inflamed sectarian tensions between Lebanon’s Sunnis and Shiites — with Sunnis generally backing the rebel groups and Shiites supporting the government of President Bashar Assad. The Iranian-backed Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah has actively fought on the Syrian government side.

Local media had reported that negotiations were underway, with the militants demanding cash and the release of Islamists being held in Lebanese detention. A statement posted by supporters of the Islamic State said Medlej was killed after he tried to escape.

Medlej hailed from a large Shiite clan from the eastern Lebanese city of Baalbak.

His mother vowed revenge on rival Sunnis.

“We have to take our revenge from those apostates,” she said.

The captured soldiers and police are from Lebanon’s many religious sects: the first soldier beheaded by the group, Ali Sayid, was a Sunni Muslim. The militants are also holding Christian soldiers and other Sunni Muslims.

Families of the captive soldiers have blocked highways and held demonstrations to pressure the Lebanese government to push harder for the release of the men. There are also fears for the safety of the more than 1 million Syrian refugees who are now in Lebanon as rage grows over the beheadings.

Medlej’s uncle vowed that “every Syrian in Lebanon is a target” after hearing of his nephew’s death.

The Islamic State group has drawn global attention particularly since June, when it swept through northern and western Iraq from its stronghold in neighboring Syria.

They reached Lebanon in August when they overran Arsal, and operate just across the border in the nearby hills of Syria.

On Saturday, Lebanon’s state-run news agency reported heavy fighting in the barren hills between Arsal and the border with Syria. It came hours after militants on a motorbike opened fire on Lebanese soldiers patrolling in a vehicle in the nearby town of Qaa. The soldiers killed one of the attackers, state media reported.

Car sales in Lebanon up 7% since 2013

car-sales-lebanon(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Figures released by the Association of Automobile Importers in Lebanon (AIA) indicate that 22,004 new passenger cars were sold in the first seven months of 2014, constituting an increase of 7.2% from 20,521 cars sold in the same period last year, Byblos Bank ‘Lebanon This Week’ reported.

Korean cars accounted for 43.1% of total sales, followed by Japanese cars with a 33% share, European automobiles with 17.8%, American vehicles with 4.6%, and Chinese cars with 1.5%.

The number of Japanese cars sold rose by 38.1% year-on-year, constituting the highest rise in new car sales; while the number of new Chinese cars sold declined by 19% from the same period last year, followed by American vehicles with a 12.8% fall, European automobiles with a 4.1% decrease and Korean cars with a 1.3% drop in sales.

Kia is the leading brand in the Lebanese market with 5,177 cars sold in the first seven months of 2014, followed by Hyundai with 4,310, Nissan with 2,913 cars sold, Toyota (2,555), Renault (769), Mitsubishi (627) and Chevrolet (511).

In parallel, 1,333 new commercial vehicles were sold in the first seven months of 2014, constituting a drop of 3.5% from 1,381 vehicles sold in the same period of last year and a decrease of 3.3% from 1,379 vehicles sold in the first seven months of 2012.

The number of new vehicles sold by the country’s top five distributors reached 17,244 in the first seven months of 2014 and accounted for 74% of new vehicles sold. NATCO sal sold 5,177 vehicles in the covered period, equivalent to 22.2% of the total, followed by Century Motor Co. sal with 4,409 (18.9%), Rasamny Younis Motor Co. sal with 3,180 (13.6%), Boustany United Machineries sal with 2,796 (12%), and Bassoul Heneine sal with 1,682 (7.2%).

The AIA indicated that the combined number of registered new and imported used cars stagnated in the first seven months of 2014 compared to the same period of 2013, while it decreased by 8.2% from the first seven months of 2012. It said that the luxury car segment accounted for only 3.5% of total new registered cars. It reiterated that about 90% of new cars sold were small automobiles that cost on average about $11,000 each.

Lebanese teens launch ‘Burn ISIS Flag Challenge’

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Teens in Lebanon have reportedly kicked off a new campaign aimed at countering the Islamic State — with the Burn ISIS Flag Challenge.

Mediaite reported that one commenter on a YouTube video showing the burning of the widely recognized symbol reads: “I nominate the whole world to #Burn_ISIS_Flag_Challenge. You have 24 hours. GO!!”

The Lebanese justice minister, meanwhile, says the action isn’t acceptable.

He said that anyone caught buying the Islamic State flags would face the “sternest punishments” possible, Mediaite reported. He said the flag represents Muslims’ declaration of faith and those who burn anything with the flag’s text on it are being purposely provocative, the news outlet reported.

Aat least one member of the country’s parliament has offered to serve as the boys’ lawyer should the case go to court.

Desecrating religious symbols and inciting sectarian strife are both punishable under Lebanese law.

The #BurnISISFlagChallenge was inspired by this summer’s viral ALS Ice Bucket Challenge, a fundraising effort for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

Lebanon struggles to address captive troops crisis

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanon’s government is forming a crisis committee to handle the case of some two dozen members of the security forces held captive by Syrian militants amid escalating criticism over its response to the hostage affair.

Information Minister Ramzi Jreij said Thursday that Prime Minister Tammam Salam will head the committee, which will also include the defense, finance, interior, foreign and justice ministers.

Militants, including from the Islamic State extremist group, seized around 30 soldiers and policemen after overrunning a Lebanese border town in early August.

Some have since been released. Human Rights Watch says an estimated 14 policemen and 12 soldiers are still being held.

Relatives of the missing have rallied outside the government building in Beirut to demand action to secure the captives’ release.

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